Serving a bowstring refers to binding and covering the bowstring in serving cord in order to protect, strengthen and provide certain features to the bowstring. Bowstrings are often serviced to bind the fibers of a bowstring or to create looped ends or to create a notch in the bowstring. Bowstrings may also be serviced simply to temper use and normal wear of a bowstring and prolong its useful life.
However, commercially serviced bowstrings may not be readily available due to many sizes and types of bows on the market and the specialized needs of archery enthusiasts. Additionally, because bowstrings are made of increasingly complicated and sophisticated composite materials such as Dacron, Kevlar and specialized polymers and polyethylenes, specific service cord may therefore be needed to match certain types of bowstring. It is usually economically impracticable for merchants to stock more than the most common served bowstrings. Therefore, bowstrings are often custom served to varying models and types of bows and bowstrings available today.
Custom service of a bowstring may be done manually using a conventional serving jig but manual tools and methods not only limit the number bowstrings that may be produced but also cause fatigue and wear to the wrists and hands of the one producing the bowstring. However, powered serving tools often require large and immobile machines in long tracks in order to produce high quality servings. On the other hand, smaller and more portable tools and methods do not produce the high quality and economical results needed for today's archery enthusiasts.
A powered serving jig and winder device for serving a bowstring comprises a right angle gear train having a drive shaft orthogonal to a hollow transmission shaft. The drive shaft is configured to be received into a chuck of a portable drill. The disclosure also includes a left and a right serving cam. Each cam is configured to attach to a respective end of the transmission shaft and to define a hole coaxial with the transmission shaft. Each cam is also configured to interlock with a modified serving jig. The powered serving jig and winder device may further comprise a bushing disposed in the coaxial hole of each serving cam. The bushing is configured to protect the bowstring and serving cord from rotation of the cam around the bowstring and the serving cord.
The disclosed serving jig includes a serving cord train comprising a supply bobbin, two tensioning rods and a serving cord guide recessed in a bowstring groove formed in a body of the jig. The serving cord train is configured to supply serving cord from the bobbin between the tensioning rods and through the serving cord guide into the bowstring groove for serving cord around a bowstring. The modified serving jig also includes at least one of a pin extending from the jig and a hole defined therein. Each pin and hole are configured complementary to a hole and pin respectively defined in and extending from a serving cam of a powered winder device and thereby interlock the serving jig to the serving cam and align the bowstring groove on the jig coaxially with the hollow transmission shaft of the winder.
Other aspects and advantages of embodiments of the disclosure will become apparent from the following detailed description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, illustrated by way of example of the principles of the disclosure.
a depicts a bottom elevational view of the modified serving jig in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure.
b depicts a lateral elevational view of a modified serving jig illustrating a mounting block attached thereto in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure.
Throughout the description, similar reference numbers may be used to identify similar elements depicted in multiple embodiments. Although specific embodiments of the invention have been described and illustrated, the invention is not to be limited to the specific forms or arrangements of parts so described and illustrated. The scope of the invention is to be defined by the claims appended hereto and their equivalents.
Reference will now be made to exemplary embodiments illustrated in the drawings and specific language will be used herein to describe the same. It will nevertheless be understood that no limitation of the scope of the disclosure is thereby intended. Alterations and further modifications of the inventive features illustrated herein and additional applications of the principles of the inventions as illustrated herein, which would occur to one skilled in the relevant art and having possession of this disclosure, are to be considered within the scope of the invention.
The disclosed powered serving jig and winder device for bowstring can cut the time it takes to serve a bowstring in half due to the powered drive and the simplicity of operation. The final served bowstring is produced to the highest quality specifications possible because of the degree of control allowed in the disclosed unique and non-obvious design. Additionally, the disclosed device is very safe to use having a completely enclosed gear box and design free of snagging corners and catching surfaces. Furthermore, the present disclosure is economical to produce in mass due to the modification of a conventional serving jig in combination with the powered winder device.
In an embodiment of the disclosed powered serving jig and winder device, each cam may be configured to interlock with a serving jig and therefore further comprise at least one of a pin extending therefrom and a hole defined therein, each pin thereof configured complementary to a hole defined in the serving jig and a hole thereof configured complementary to a pin in the serving jig. Throughout the present disclosure, the term ‘interlock’ may define two or more things which engage with each other by overlapping or by the fitting together of projections and recesses therein. In an embodiment of the disclosure, holes in each serving cam 9a and 9b may be parallel with the coaxial hole in each cam. There may be two sets of two holes each as illustrated by holes 9a and holes 9b. A center of each hole in a set may be approximately 21.0 millimeters from a center of the coaxial transmission shaft hole 3d (and therefore also the bushing hole 11d) and 41.0 millimeters (d1) from the other hole on a non-diametric cord approximately 4.5 millimeters (d2) from the center of the coaxial hole. One hole set may be disposed approximately 9.0 millimeters (d3) from the other hole set.
Each serving cam may be comprised of a solid block of machined aluminum approximately 13.5 millimeters thick. A shape of a serving cam may include a rounded end rectilinear shape, a disk, an oval, an ellipse and any other cam-like geometry comprising at least one of an interlocking pin and hole. An outside edge of one serving cam to an outside edge of another cam may measure approximately 92.0 millimeters and an outside edge of one cam with a bushing to an outside edge of another cam with a bushing may measure approximately 93.5 millimeters.
a depicts a bottom elevational view of a modified serving jig in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure. The disclosed serving jig comprises a bowstring groove 12 and a serving cord guide hole 12a recessed therein and at least two pins 13 and 14 extending away from the jig in a parallel direction to the bowstring groove 12. The pins 13 and 14 are configured to allow the serving jig to interlock with one of the first and second serving cams 9 and 10. The pins 13 and 14 therefore include unattached chamfered ends. The disclosed serving jig also includes a knurled tensioning nut 19 for convenient replacement of the serving spool 15 (not depicted) on the spool shaft 20.
b depicts a lateral elevational view of the modified serving jig illustrating a mounting block attached thereto in accordance with an embodiment of the present disclosure. The disclosed modified serving jig may comprise a serving cord train including a supply bobbin (not depicted), two tensioning rods 16 and 17, a serving cord guide 12a recessed in a bowstring groove 12 formed in a body of the jig 18, the train configured to supply serving cord from the bobbin between the tensioning rods and through the serving cord guide into the bowstring groove for serving cord around a bowstring. The mounting block 21 is attached to the body of the serving jig 18. Pins 13 and 14 are set in the mounting block 21 on one end and configured to fit into the holes in the serving cams 9 and 10 of the powered winder device on a free chamfered end. The mounting block affixed on an inside surface of the serving jig may therefore comprise at least one of a pin extending therefrom and a hole defined therein, the block also comprises a notch for clearance from the bowstring groove.
In embodiments of the disclosure, the modified serving jig may comprise at least one of a pin extending therefrom and a hole defined therein, each pin configured complementary to a hole defined in a serving cam and a hole configured complementary to a pin in a serving cam and thereby interlock the serving jig on a serving cam to align a bowstring groove on the jig with the hollow transmission shaft. Where two pins extend from the mounting block 21 attached to the serving jig, the two pins may measure approximately 41.0 millimeters from center to center. Also, the two serving jig pins each may each extend approximately 18 millimeters from a side of the serving jig. The chamfered free end of each pin facilitates interlocution with a parallel hole in a serving cam.
The present disclosure therefore allows for tighter more uniform serving application on a bowstring that protects and strengthens the bowstring. The present disclosure allows an operator to service the bowstring from either end without removing the winder device or serving jig. When a bowstring is served by hand and an operator stops to take a break, a loose spot may be created which may cause serving separation in use of the bowstring. The disclosure enables high quality service of bowstrings to bind the fibers of a bowstring or to create looped ends or to create a notch in the bowstring. Bowstrings now may be economically serviced simply to temper use and normal wear of a bowstring and prolong its useful life.
Although the operations of the method(s) herein are shown and described in a particular order, the order of the operations of each method may be altered so that certain operations may be performed in an inverse order or so that certain operations may be performed, at least in part, concurrently with other operations. In another embodiment, instructions or sub-operations of distinct operations may be implemented in an intermittent and/or alternating manner.
And though specific embodiments of the invention have been described and illustrated, the invention is not to be limited to the specific forms or arrangements of parts so described and illustrated. The scope of the invention is to be defined by the claims and their equivalents to be included by reference in a non-provisional utility application.
This application claims the benefit of the priority date of earlier filed U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/390,674, filed Oct. 7, 2010 for Ben D. Blosser, incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61390674 | Oct 2010 | US |